In the AI world of 2026, the story of a prodigy teenager is updating at an astonishing pace. Recently, the group intelligence engine "MiroFish" developed by fourth-year student BaiFu (Guo Hangjiang) not only topped the GitHub global trend list, but also caught the attention of Chen Tianqiao, founder of Shanda Group, who offered a seed round investment of 30 million RMB. This substantial sum will be directly used for further product development, helping it move from the lab to a broader commercial battlefield.

This "a horse trainer recognizes a thousand-mile horse" scenario was not accidental. Previously, Guo Hangjiang's other open-source project "BettaFish" had once dominated the hot search list. At that time, Chen Tianqiao, who was overseas and closely following AI frontiers, had already extended an olive branch, inviting him to join. This time, "MiroFish" seems to represent a stunning transformation in multi-agent technology.

What exactly is "MiroFish"? Simply put, it is a next-generation AI prediction engine based on multi-agent technology. Its most amazing feature lies in its "turning stones into gold" ability: as long as you input real-world seed information - whether it is breaking news, policy drafts or minor financial fluctuations - it can automatically build a highly realistic "parallel digital world." In this virtual space, countless agents begin to simulate and compete, ultimately providing highly valuable predictive results for real decisions.

From the university classroom to becoming a project leader managing tens of millions of dollars, Guo Hangjiang's leap not only demonstrates the breakthrough power of Chinese young developers in AI infrastructure technology, but also proves the capital market's extreme desire for the "agent predicts the future" industry. When "parallel worlds" are no longer science fiction terms, but productive forces that can be calculated and simulated, we may be standing at a new starting point for predicting the future.